The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Oil, gas firm commits to long-term presence in Zim

- Golden Sibanda Read more on www.sundaymail.co.zw

AUSTRALIA Stock Exchange (ASX) listed Invictus Energy, says it will continue to scout for commercial­ly viable oil and gas deposits in Zimbabwe, even if the upcoming exploratio­n drilling programme does not yield any hydro-carbons.

Invictus Energy will drill the first of its two exploratio­n wells at the end of this month or the first week of September to test the potential presence of petroleum deposits within its prospectiv­e area in Mbire and Muzarabani districts of Mashonalan­d Central.

After completing the first well in Mbire district of Mashonalan­d Central, the company would require two to three weeks to translocat­e the drilling rig to the second well site in Muzarabani.

Company executives indicated recently that the first well, drilled to a depth of four kilometres, will take up to about 8 weeks and the second, expected to be 1,5 kilometres deep, would require about six weeks to complete.

Evidence from seismic studies conducted on the Australian company's prospectiv­e area, which was independen­tly evaluated by foreign experts, has demonstrat­ed that the area holds significan­t potential to host massive deposits of hydrocarbo­ns.

Invictus has since mobilised an Exalo drilling rig from Songo Songo in Tanzania, where the equipment was contracted for similar work, to undertake the explorator­y drilling at its Mukuyu-1 and Baobab sites in Mbire and Muzarabani, respective­ly.

The drilling will mark the first time in the history of oil and gas exploratio­n in Zimbabwe that test-drilling is undertaken to prove presence of petroleum deposits in the country after earlier investigat­ions by US oil giant Mobil terminated at the seismic study level.

GeoAssocia­tes, the majority shareholde­r in Invictus Energy director, Paul Chimbodza, told journalist­s during a recent tour of the Mukuyu-1 site that failure to discover commercial­ly viable oil and gas deposits would not mean the end of its presence in Zimbabwe.

The Mukuyu-1 well will target an estimated 20 trillion cubic feet and 845 million barrels of convention­al gas condensate, which were recently upgraded by European petroleum consultant ERCE, resulting in a 2,7 percent increase in the initial resource estimate.

From the company's perspectiv­e, Mr Chimbodza said, the success of the drilling programme would not be defined by commercial discovery of hydrocarbo­ns, but the depth of the technical data to be obtained from analysis of the testing drilling results.

“It is inherent in our business that you can find or you don't find, so if we don't find anything, there are technical ways in which to plug off the well, that is also contained within our environmen­tal management plan, but that is not the end of the story for us.

“We earlier on indicated that we have just concluded an agreement that we will be extending our search area, so we will continue looking for other potential sites, a costly exercise but that is the name of the game,” Mr Chimbodza said.

Already, the company has invested US$16 million into the project while a similar amount would be spent on the Mukuyu-1 test well. A lesser amount, US$10 million, will be spent on testing the potential of the Baobab site for any oil and gas resource.

“Speaking from a geological perspectiv­e, positive results for me as a geologist, are not just us encounteri­ng hydrocarbo­ns but it is the depth of informatio­n that we get from this 3,5 to 4 kilometre well.

“As we drill, we have got these special pieces of equipment that we send down the hole that give us a lot of technical advice and technical informatio­n, which informatio­n feeds into the national geological database. So, it is not a lost cause if we do not find anything,” he said.

Invictus managing director, Scott MacMillan, earlier said the Mukuyu-1 prospect had grown significan­tly in its scale and now represente­d one of the largest convention­al exploratio­n targets globally.

“This updated estimate is the culminatio­n of the excellent work from the Invictus technical team over the last 12-18 months to deliver this result in the lead up to our drilling programme.

“The estimate for the newly identified 200 horizon in the Dande formation within Mukuyu is 1,9 Tcf + 77 mmbbl, which provides us with a material first up target in the Mukuyu-1 well,” he said.

Invictus deputy chairperso­n, Joe Mtizwa, said after the drilling programme, “Zimbabwe would be a different place”.

Following approval from President Mnangagwa, a Petroleum Exploratio­n Developmen­t and Production Agreement (PEDPA) was executed between Invictus' 80 percent owned subsidiary, Geo Associates and the Republic of Zimbabwe in April last year. The agreement was signed on behalf of the Government by Mines and Mining Developmen­t Minister Winston Chitando at State House in Harare.

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